Gay rally gets OK on route
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Lolita Harper
Organizers of a lesbian pride march, scheduled to take place in
two weeks, withdrew a request for a waiver of permit fees Monday
night as part of a deal they struck with the city that will allow
them to walk their desired route.
Visibility is the most important factor, and the idea of marching
only on sidewalks or in a residential area, as city officials
suggested to the group in previous meetings, was not feasible,
organizers said.
Lori Hutson, one of the Orange County Dyke March organizers,
praised the city for working toward a compromise.
“I’m really pleased with the way the city worked with us,” she
said.
Hutson and Catie Profeta, another march coordinator, met with city
officials Friday to discuss the rally. City officials approved a
route of about a mile that starts at Harbor Boulevard, near Lions
Park, and travels south to 18th Street. During the march, the streets
will be temporarily closed at 1:30 p.m. Aug. 17 but reopened when the
crowd passes.
“They got the parade route that works for them, and they
understand that they need to pay the fees like everyone else, and
they are satisfied with that,” Mayor Linda Dixon said of the
compromise.
Although the request was formally withdrawn, the issue was far
from dead.
Councilman Gary Monahan said he was concerned that street closures
did not have to be approved by the City Council. Businesses along the
route will be affected -- if only for a short time -- and should have
the opportunity to have their input heard, he said.
“As a business owner, if the streets were closed down in front of
my place even for half an hour, I would be furious,” the councilman
said.
While Monahan’s concerns were focused on specific aspects of the
march, many residents came to the meeting prepared to address the
council about the event in general.
Resident Robin Leffler was concerned the group was receiving
special treatment and wanted clarification about the concessions the
city made.
Dixon said she wanted to make it clear that the city did not waive
any fees. There was a slight reduction to the charges only because
the route was shortened and, as a result, the calculated fee was
smaller.
City Manager Allan Roeder said he would place the entire permit,
with all the relevant details, on the city’s Web site by the end of
the week.
Other residents were less concerned with paperwork and more with
the nature of the event.
Resident Kim White said parades such as this one should be
distinguished from events put on by service groups, such as the Lions
Club or Kiwanis.
White said the march’s aim was to promote a lifestyle that some
find “deviant, immoral and offensive.”
Sue Smith, the chairwoman of the city’s Human Relations Committee,
which voted last week to recommend that the council waive fees for
the march, said it reflected well on the city.
“Out of 34 cities in Orange County, they chose Costa Mesa for the
first-ever Orange County march,” she said. “This event is joining
Costa Mesa with 15 other major cities in the United States.”
The Dyke March was started in 1993 in Washington, D.C., and has
grown in popularity, reaching 15 cities across the country, such as
Los Angeles, Chicago and New York.
The group thinks it is important to bring the event to
traditionally conservative Orange County to counteract some of the
violence and discrimination lesbians have faced, Profeta has said.
Organizers said they chose Costa Mesa as the host city because of
its reputation for diversity and its ongoing efforts to eradicate
discrimination.
The Dyke March and Rally will take place Aug. 17 in Lions Park.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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